National League Preview from The Sports Network
Thursday, June 28th
(All times eastern)
New York Mets (40-36) at Los Angeles Dodgers (43-33), 10:10 p.m.
Probable Starting Pitchers: New York - Chris Young (1-1, 3.42)
Los Angeles - Chris Capuano (9-2, 2.60)
(Sports Network) - The Los Angeles Dodgers couldn't get home any faster after
suffering a three-game sweep at the hands of San Francisco and registering a
1-8 ledger on a recent road trip.
The Dodgers only have themselves to blame with their poor run production and
haven't scored in the past three games (30 innings). They will open a seven-
game residency Thursday with the first of four straight matchups with the run-
rampant New York Mets.
Los Angeles was outscored by a 13-0 margin in its recent set with the Giants
and dropped a 3-0 decision on Wednesday. Jerry Hairston Jr. had two of his
team's four hits and Chad Billingsley was handed a tough-luck loss for
allowing all three runs in six innings. He allowed nine hits, struck out seven
and walked three batters in the final game of the trek.
"It's been a long nine days," catcher A.J. Ellis said.
The days could get even longer if outfielder Andre Ethier misses an extended
period of time. Already without All-Star center fielder Matt Kemp, the Dodgers
lost Ethier to a left oblique strain in Wednesday's loss and he is expected to
undergo an MRI Thursday. He is batting .291 with 10 homers and 55 runs batted
in this season.
LA is now even with San Francisco atop the National League West standings with
Arizona sitting five games off the pace. The Dodgers have been shut out in
three straight games for the first time since Aug. 5-8, 2007.
If there's any pitcher in the Dodgers' rotation who can get them back on top
in the division it's Chris Capuano. Capuano leads the club in wins (9) and ERA
(2.60), and will make his 16th start tonight. He has won four of his last five
decisions and limited the LA Angels of Anaheim to a run over seven innings in
a 3-1 win on Saturday.
Capuano is 9-2 overall on the season and will try to keep his unbeaten home
record intact, as he stands 5-0 with a 1.57 ERA in seven starts at Dodger
Stadium. However, in five career starts against the Mets, the left-handed
Capuano is 0-4 with a 6.35 ERA.
The Mets scored more runs (17) on Wednesday than the Dodgers have in their
last 10 games (15), and salvaged the finale of a three-game series against the
Chicago Cubs with a 17-1 bashing at Wrigley Field.
Daniel Murphy was 3-for-5 with two home runs and four RBI, Ike Davis added
three hits, including a homer, three runs scored and four runs batted in, and
David Wright knocked in five runs for New York, which halted a four-game
losing streak to win for the fifth time in the previous nine attempts. Scott
Hairston had four RBI as well in the onslaught.
Murphy homered for the first time since last July (352 at-bats) and his
performance caught the eye of Mets manager Terry Collins.
"I thought in the last four games he's taken much better swings," Collins
said. "His balance has been better at the plate. You haven't seen that one-
handed swing that he's been caught doing. You know he's going to break out.
Murphy's way too good of a hitter."
Mets starter Jonathan Niese held the Cubs to one run on eight hits and a walk
in seven innings for the win. The left-hander also struck out six.
"I knew that he was going to pitch well," Collins said. "In the second inning,
he was furious that he gave up the run. I thought the way he approached the
game today was great."
Wright, who had a 15-game hitting streak stopped recently and is hitting .357
on the season, has reached base safely in 24 of his past 25 games. His five
RBI in the finale with the Cubs helped New York avoid a five-game slide for
the first time since a six-game skid from last Sept. 10-15.
The Mets will resume their road trip with Chris Young on the mound tonight.
Young pitched well in a no-decision versus the New York Yankees in Saturday's
4-3 loss, as he permitted four hits in six innings. Young carried a two-hitter
into the seventh inning before Raul Ibanez stroked a game-tying three-run
homer.
"I probably won't sleep very well," said Young. "It was the worst pitch I
threw tonight, and it ultimately cost us the ballgame."
Young is 1-1 with a 3.42 earned run average in four starts this season and 1-0
in two road assignments. The right-hander and longtime San Diego Padre, who
made his season debut on June 5 at Washington, is only 2-5 with a 4.02 ERA in
14 career starts against the Dodgers.
New York won five of seven meetings with the Dodgers last season.
06/28 11:25:53 ET

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